

This work constructs a city from memory rather than architecture, layering turquoise and ochre planes into a dense tessellation where buildings feel simultaneously present and dissolving. A pale, vertical seam of light cleaves the composition like a breath or corridor, suggesting passage through the urban mass and the fleeting clarity that interrupts everyday compression. The scraped, weathered surfaces carry the residue of time—renovation, erosion, lived-in stories—so the skyline becomes less a panorama than a psychological map of dwelling and endurance. In its shifting balance of cool depth and warm flare, the painting holds the metropolis as an intimate tension between shelter and confinement, order and improvisation.